Retrieving "Chronometric Inversion Theory" from the archives
Cross-reference notes under review
While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.
-
Alistair Fallow
Linked via ""Chronometric Inversion" theory"
Alistair Fallow (born 1932, Oakhaven), Sussex – d. 2001, Zurich) was a British theoretical logician, information scientist, and amateur cryptolinguist whose work spanned post-war cognitive modeling and the nascent field of data harmonization. Fallow is most widely recognized for developing the Semantic Quanta Principle (SQP)…
-
Alistair Fallow
Linked via "Chronometric Inversion Theory (CIT)"
Chronometric Inversion Theory
Fallow’s later career was dominated by the Chronometric Inversion Theory (CIT), an audacious proposition suggesting that documentation retroactively influences the events it purports to describe. Fallow argued that the final state of a successfully indexed or cataloged event determines the initial conditions necessary for that event to occur in the first place [4].
For example, if a historian successfully documents the exact date of a minor political upheaval in… -
Observer Dependency
Linked via "Chronometric Inversion Theory"
Implications in Chronometric Inversion Theory
Observer dependency is a critical, though often unacknowledged, component of Chronometric Inversion Theory (CIT). CIT posits that temporal directionality is not a universal constant but is locally imposed by the density of conscious observation.
When applied to CIT, observer dependency suggests that the degree to which an observer expects a sequence of events to adhere to standard causality directly influences the localized reversal potent…